Jon: What do you think sparked your interest in computers?
Liza: For starters computers aren’t the focus of my interest people are. Computers are a technology that people have to adjust to. It was clear to e that it was a really powerful technology and it was going to change the way we did things so I was excited to be in at the beginning at the popularization of computers so I could see how people changed. That’s what was going on in the early 70s when I started working on this, but I would have to admit that my family was into computers a lot earlier than that. I grew up in a science and technology household. My father was an audiophile and had done some research on coding, worked with scientists at MI. It was both questions of language and questions of coding and questions of the use of technology for all kinds of things were dinner table conversation for us so this isn’t a big leap for me Technology doesn't mean electronics it means know how. Technique is how you do things and -ology is the study of things. I think your asking when did I see the potential of electronic computers for education not technology, because everything has a technology whether it is a pencil or a digging stick it is all technology. Educational technology when I was in school was books what we call ditto sheets or spirit masters, mimiograph; blackboard there is a wonderful description of a blackboard as a fantastic new educational technology. But kids who were using slates in the 1600's so a big slate in the front of the classroom was a new technology compared with the small slates kids had at their desks even in all through the 1800's. We were using what were called program learning books which were little workbooks small paper bound books 8 1/2 by 11 with questions or exercises on one side and you folded a paper over the answer and than you can slide the paper down to get the answer, so you would look on the left hand side of the page because we are working in English because I’m American and the question or the exercise would be on the left hand side and you had the page closed and you wrote your answer down than you slid the coversheet down so you could see the answer than you could correct your own work. My first introduction to computing in educating was automating that process. When we first started using computers they were large computers being time shared so there were lots of people using the same computer. So it was a no brainer to go from that to communicating between those people there was no Internet but you could send a message to somebody else. So the ideas of creating classroom simulations both synchronous meaning everyone is communicating at the same time or asynchronous meaning one person puts in there ideas comments responses and another person can see those later and interact in a time segmented way asynchronously. Those were radical ideas for ordinary classroom teachers but for those of us who were trying to imagine what the future could be like, they were pretty obvious. That was a formal education aspect of it but the none formal education aspect of it but the non formal education aspect of it was here were these new instruments that we wanted to learn how to use how were we going to learn how to use them because nobody else knows either. So I think even more important than the effort to automate existing teaching techniques was the growth of peer interaction of you go study or experiment how ever you can than you come together in a group and you share what you discovered with everybody else and you hope they discovered something different so each one can teach each other. Both the social technology combination of studying by yourself and coming together in a group and peer teaching and the growth of originally newsletters or how to do it manuals into what is now become the internet and all the how to do it YouTube videos, that was a pretty smooth transition. But we could imagine back before todays technologies were available we could imagine using these instruments to create that world.
Jon: You, Dean Brown, Stuart Cooney, started LO*OP Center, what were the main objectives?
Liza: Well I was here at sonoma state at the time and my fellow students and the professors as well as I had access to the state college computer system where the actual computer system was at Cal State Northridge. WE were sitting in Stevenson hall in a little room with what were called glass teletypes they were terminal with keyboard and screen with keyboard and we were timesharing with the Cal state system computer and there were what we would now call applications in other words if you wanted to crunch some numbers you could get a program to do that and there were games and lessons and programming languages available and there were about 6 or 7 seats in that little timeshare room and everybody is hunched over there keyboard and when somebody had a question if they didn’t know how to do something you turn to the person next to you and ask. But that was a real privilege to be able to use those, there was also by the way outside of the timeshare room 3 or 4 punch machines so you could make your own deck of cards and submit your own deck to be processed for bash processing which was a more at that time in the early 70s the more normal way that people did computing you didn’t do it in real time. Unless you were a student at a university or working for a company that used computers nobody had access to them. Nobody else could get to them they couldn’t learn about them they couldn’t access them they couldn’t use them for their own purposes. I though that these things would infiltrate society as they did and that there were going to be two kinds of people in the world in the future the kind of people who knew about computers and computing and how to control them and the people that were controlled by them and to me that was a real anti-utopias, this was a way of creating a way for ordinary people who were neither university students or people working for companies that had computers could get access to them learn about them use them either for their work or for there play or for there education.
Jon: What are some opportunities LO*OP Center allowed the people?
Liza: We were right on the bus line between Petaluma and Santa Rosa because were in downtown Cotati. There were almost no computers in schools so kids could come after school to loop center and do whatever they wanted with it. We taught programming we taught as applications came up we taught applications. We had the only copy machine publicly accessible copy machine as well. At that time there were no copy centers so if you wanted to make a copy of something I’m trying to think of where one would go aside from the LO*OP Center. Xerox machines and there were only Xerox machines and that was what you could get were just not publicly available, big companies had them otherwise if you wanted a copy of something you retyped it, and when you knew you were going to want copies you used carbon paper when you typed it. That was just a sideline but it actually brought us enough money to keep the doors open. People would come in and pay 15 or 20 cents a page. There was one man who had a stock investment scheme who was working out his process on our computer which was a pvp8, a digital corporation machine so he came and what we did was, computer time was 10$ an hour but for 10$ a month. If you wanted to rent time on one of our computers we had 3 or 4 of them you could rent private time on the computer for 10$ hour but for 10$ a month you become a member of loop center and the members could use the computers anytime there were no private it wasn’t sold for private time. So kids came and played games, schools brought field trips and after the first or second year we started taking the computers over to schools because people became more interested. It was also a place where people could just meet and greet we had a lounge and people could come talk and sit about their interests.
Jon: Can you further explain the story of the loop center being a milestone in the in 1976 in the development of the internet and its significance for education?
That’s what happens when people who were not there try and rewrite history. When we opened and we were on east Cotati av. in a second floor office when we first opened 1975 in December. You had to get a special phone line to send data over the phone line for starters you couldn’t send it through the air and we used what was called an acoustic kepler and you had your data conditioned line and an old fashioned headset which had two round circles in it one for the earphone one for the microphone one for the speaker and you dialed up the computer line to someplace where there was a computer that had a modem at the other end and when it started buzzing and clicking than you took your handset and you pushed it in to two rubber cups modem which stands for modulator demodulator and took those audio clicks and buzzes and turned them into electronic signals which was the modulation sends it down the phone line as audio signal and at the other and the other modem demodulated sent it as an electronic signal into the computer. We had and of course if there was any noise or static on the line you get an error in the computer signal they would have to resend it. We had an account with an organization with call computer in Mountain View California, which just sold time on their hp computer, and then we had an account with Lawrence hall of science. That is how we opened we did not have our own computer when we first opened. There was no Internet there was the phone company all one-phone company, which was AT&T there were no alternate competing phone companies at the time. We had a teletype which is what they use to send telegrams through which was all uppercase and the modems in the phone line and the phoneline went directly to the computer time that we rented on somebody else’s computer. Just popularizing and letting people know that they can get access to a computer over the phone lines was I think creating the social context for the internet so maybe that’s what the person that wrote that timeline was talking about. Arpanet, which the precursor to the Internet existed at the time but it, was only through universities and government agencies. It was started as a military communication device and there was connection at Mofit field in Mountain View there was a connection at Stanford institute there was no connection up here so if I wanted to get on Arpanet I had to make a long distance phone call there was a connection at UC Berkley it was probably a connection at Stanford each of the connections was called a tip, this was a time when there was a lot of counterculture people out there some of whom were actually in the military and were in big corporations and a friend gave me the access codes for Arpanet to tip and so some of us got on the Arpanet uses it to send precursor email messages to our friends across the country or the world but I think again the person that picked up that we were doing internet kind of stuff was just looking at us using telnet which was intermediate phone company, I’m trying to think of what the relationship is between you had to have both an at&t account and a telnet account and the telnet number called the computer number and both the sending terminal and the receiving computer had to have telnet accounts. In our collection I haven’t been thinking about this recently but I was real good at it at the time and again part of why what I want to do hcle is so people have a concept of how complicating it was to do what we take for granted today and I have lots of manuals showing telling how to use this stuff and what exactly the process is and of course because we had a public access computer center I had to write instructions for how to do this for people came in off the street and wanted to use computers to play computer games.
Jon: How did HCLE come about?
Well actually there were two triggers. One was I had to close the storefront several years earlier. Hcle started in 2003 as a dream not as a reality, and the LO*OP Center has been closed as a loop center storefront computer center for over 10 years b than so the public access dream was not happening at that time but I never threw anything out so I had it in storage and I moved and had to move all that stuff. I said to myself well I got to get rid of most of this and either I can throw it out or I can say somebody might be interested in this stuff and I could make a museum out of it. So I was trying to figure out what to do and one of my board members for loop center Jackie Hood said she would really like to the museum project and so she started working on it we ended up deciding to take it different directions ad since I was the founder it got to going my direction but Jackie was instrumental in getting me going
Jon: What are your thoughts on the use of computers as an educational tool and where do you see the future of this technique?
Education comes from the Latin word -educare mean lead out of so education is always a way of leading someone out of the way that they are into some new place. I always contrast education with learning. Learning goes on all the time everything and every situation is an opportunity for learning. If a person has changed they learned something, they may learn to be afraid of thunder or they may learn to calculate differential equations those are both learning experiences so learning to use a new tool is just as much learning as being able to recite the Gettysburg address even though one may be on some formal curriculum and the other one isn't. Learning to use a computer has become a part of formal education another aspect of education is in general we only teach proactively those things that people don't learn spontaneously this is becoming a problem because in a world surrounded by books and writing and computers little kids often learn these things without any formal teaching. There are lots of kids who get curious and teach themselves to read and most of us don’t learn to use a modern computer in school we learn it from our friends on the street at home so there is a tension between the process we see at schooling where somehow the learner is suppose to wait for the teacher to present information to them and then acquire it through that presentation process vs. the absorbing that we do from learning from our environment it is important to think about those issues and the relationship between computing school because the modern computer does two things. First of all it has become ubiquitous so 2 or 3 year olds are learning how to use computers the way they are learning how to use crayons which didn’t necessarily happen in school, in a home which wouldn’t necessarily be considered a culturally deprived home every kid learns how to use a computer and probably learn how to hold a pencil and in the same way today an awful amount of kids are learning how to use computers without needing to be taught. The fact that it is part of the environment and you learn to use it from your older brothers and sisters means it is not a school subject. Once you know how to read and use a computer there is a huge world of information that is open to you which didn’t use to be open to people, we use to be pretty much limited to the knowledge that was available in our family in our neighborhood through our teachers through our school and once you have a computer and its related connections to the rest of the world it is a window on a world that is much bigger than a funnel that any teacher could feed you of information. I had that particular concept in the early 70's and was really excited about empowering people to be self directed learners in a sense that’s a very disruptive function for the machine it disrupts the function of the school and I am a rebel and didn’t much like school was always bored and saw it as a way for everybody to break out of the classroom to break out of the lockstep of school to be able to access the information you are interested in follow your dreams learn what you wanted to learn and in a sense when you have that kind of access to the world of knowledge a teacher becomes an accessory to your world of learning and the learner becomes the center of the activity and the teacher becomes one f many different tools that you use to learn it is a completely different way of thinking about growing up and continuing to grow, growing out once you grown up you still keep growing out. It’s a different way of thinking about that process than the teachers centered classroom. Is aw the computer as a Trojan horse that would break down the walls of the school and was very excited about that possibility I’m also really unhappy when I see schools try and lock down the computer close it up I think that is a defensive move to try and preserve the status quo of the teachers centered classroom I think it is doomed to failure and the sooner we reinvent the way we scuffled learning the better, and the computer is actually being the Trojan horse that I thought it would. With all of your history with computers and your involvement with both the Loop center and HCLE.
Jon: What is some key knowledge you attained and lessons or facts about computers you feel everyone should know or be aware of?
I think the key facts in learning are not about technology they are about people. I think since we are humans we live in our own psychology and our own bodies and knowing ourselves and what keeps us happy and active and interested is the most important thing we could know and I know that I can not sit in front of a computer forever and I think that is a really important thing for each person to experience because the computer is a window on the world it is very addicted to sitting looking out that window. We have to understand the danger of that addiction and learn to cope with it. And not lose sight of all of the other joys that are available to being human. So that is number one, number two is the computer with its associated telecomunications breaks down both time and space between us as individuals and it gives us a lot of opportunities for social relationships that we have never had before. This society whether we are talking about American or western or global we don’t yet know how to use this new found ability talent opportunity and I think we are going to have to do a lot of, I like the term social engineering I know a lot of people think the term is pejorative but I see it as building and inventing new ways of relating that enhance the common good. The anti-utopia is that those folks who know about computers use them to control everybody else, and that is why I started Loop Center I didn’t want that scenario to become reality. In a way it is becoming a reality an awful amount of modern jobs basically use the person the worker as a peripheral to a computer so when I call a helpdesk or customer service, I’m really not interested in having the person I take to read to me what is on the screen what I could read for myself. To me that is an example of being a peripheral to a computer if I’m going to talk to a human I want it to be a thinking feeling person I don’t want the customer service person to give me an apology which is written on his or her screen or to tell me thank you for my patience when I have given every indication that I was not patient at all. So that is another opportunity for reinventing our society is to make sure we stay honest and to make sure we do not let ourselves become what we perceive as slaves to the machine but it is really not slaves to the machine it is slaves to the person behind the machine. There is never a case when the computer will not let you do something, because the computer never gives permission. The computer just does what the computer is programmed to do. If somebody tell me I cant do it the computer will not let me is a small matter of programming I have to get through the shield that people have used the computer to protect themselves with and get to the person who is doing the instruction of the programmer telling them what to tell the computer telling them what to tell the customer the consumer the user the poor bloke who wants to get something done. That is another reason why I wanted to do loop center is so that we as individuals would not be inoculated against this tyranny of the machine which again is the tyranny of the people behind the machine that we just wouldn’t fall for that. I dont think I have succeeded in that. The story needs to be told and the story needs to be told over and over again and it is a rallying cry.
Jon: What is the ideal future of HCLE?
There are three ideal futures. My intent is for it to be an ongoing institution, one ideal future is that it survives in some form I really want the story of how computing got from being completely irrelevant to education to considered a foundation stone of teaching and learning and that story is getting lost. People do not know anymore what we went through to get there and what we thought about to create the future that we are living in now. Having hcle exist in a sustainable form and keep using its initial of the history of computing and learning in education virtual museum, just having it exist is just one ideal. That it is a force for people not being able to be terrorized by the machine oppressed by the shield that the machine is used for is another ideal for me that the people were visionary and worked very hard about bring the personal computing revolution get credit for the work they did and the foresight they had that’s another ideal those people are dying and being forgotten. If I’m forgotten that is not so important but if all of us are forgotten that is a bad thing I think. It is a story of innovation it is a story of change and is a story of a great deal of creativity so I think it would be fun to have it told.
Jon: What is the best way for an individual to handle technology that they might feel is out of there control?
That is a wonderful question. There are a lot of different ways of control. Different kinds of control. When I was teaching at Loop Center, as it was on the open for 3 years as a public access computer center, the kids were often excited about robots and the best way to control a robot the sure fire way to control a robot it to remove its power supply. So if it doesn’t have some source of electricity it is dead, so whether that mean unplugging it or taking its batteries out or turning it off that is number one of electronic technology. Another aspect of control of at least computer and internet technology is privacy concerns, and maintaining and protecting ones identity on the web what ever one wants to keep out of public knowledge and I think the best way to do that is don’t put it on the internet, if it is on the airwaves on the net in a computer that is connected to anything else you might as well kiss it goodbye it is public. Sooner or later our whole banking system is going to get hacked and we are in for an amazing surprise. That’s my personal belief. If what you’re trying to control your privacy than don’t put it on a computer. Another way to control secrets is not to have any, you either don’t put it on the computer or you don’t care if the public knows the world knows. I like the no secrets approach myself, but in those few cases where I don’t want the public to know I just do not put it on the computer. Other forms of dealing with technology are learned about it; again technology is not computers are not electronics that is electronic technology. Technology is know how and in a sense without know how there is no technology, but you don’t want the other guy to be the only one who has got the know how. If you want control you have to have it to. Learning the basic principal of garbage in garbage out is incredibly important. There was a management textbook, I took a management course here at Sonoma State it cited a study of whether people believed something that was handwritten typed written or something that was on a computer print out, and those were the days you could tell the difference between a computer print out and a typed written page and at the time the study was done in 1965 people believed the computer printout first, the type written second, and the hand written third. That’s backwards. Anyone can make a computer print out anything they want, the fact that it is on a computer is totally irrelevant. That is what the garbage in garbage out principle means. Your more likely to get something honest if somebody write you a hand written note than you are if you are to find it on the Wikipedia. So that is another way of taking control is learning what messages to trust and what messages are suspect and how to verify how do you triangulate how do you figure out whether something that somebody is telling you, I wont say is real because I don’t know what reality is, but has a high probability of being reliable in this small piece of the universe that we live in.
Interview with Bob Albrecht: Q and A
Jon: What do you think sparked your interest in computers?
Bob: My interest in computers? Well, lets see it began in 1955. After going to college for quite a few years I finally quit half way through a masters degree and went to work at Minneapolis Honeywell Aeronautical Division in Minneapolis. This was one of those places where almost as far as you can see in this huge room were rows and columns of desks and engineers; sitting at them doing things. At first I worked on analogue computers there- REAC analogue computers. It was a room about lets you see two-thirds the size of this room (20 yards by 20 yards) full of these components and analogue computers you would use wires to hook components together and than you can simulate differential equations. We were working on flight control systems for high-speed jet aircrafts. There were other ways at that time to analyze control systems, several mechanisms feedback control systems. Than upstairs they got an IBM650 computer, the upstairs where I hung out and worked at my desk. One day my boss called me in, I have only been there for three or four months, and he said that he would like me to go upstairs and learn how to use that computer. Once I learned how to use it he than wanted me to spread the word down where we were. So that was my introduction to computers, an IBM650 drum computer. The memory was a drum that would spin, we used punch cards for input and such. So that was my introduction to computing.
Jon: How did this introduction affect you?
Bob: I liked that so much better than the stuff I was doing before, and after about a year I started looking around for a job in the computer industry. And, at the time, I especially wanted to go live in Denver because I loved skiing. I got married during this time and also had a child.
I went to a conference, a computer conference at UCLA and than on the way back there was another computer conference in Denver. So I stopped in Denver and I met these guys from a company -from Burroughs Corporation. Boroughs had just acquired a computer company called Electrodata which was based in Pasadena CA. The Oakland office was recruiting, I interviewed and I ended up being Burroughs first person in Denver. They had a couple computer installations there; my title was called sales technical rep where I did sales support and also programming. So I stayed in Denver for a while, left Burroughs, did a little consulting, went to work in the Aerospace Industry at Martin Denver in a math think tank that had various kinds of computers various kinds and computer stuff along the way -- many different computers in fact. At that time the small computers were all drum memory, this is so much more powerful (picks up iPhone) than those computers were back in those days. The Burroughs205, used when I first went to work for Burroughs, is iconic. In old episodes of Batman you will see the consul because they had lots of blinking lights and so it was the Bat-puter in those early Batman episodes. After that I joined Control Data in Denver -- back when Control Data was pretty small. I than transferred to Minneapolis and worked at Control Data in Minneapolis for a while. Around the early 1960’s or so I quit, dropped out and began doing a little consulting -- and by that time I was traveling all over the country to teachers' conferences giving papers and running workshops. When BASIC came along in 1964, by that time I was already running a course for high school students. So I started teaching high school students Fortran Programming in 1962.
Jon: Can you further elaborate on your experience of teaching and computing in the early 1960’s?
Bob: So in 1962 I began to teach high school students. Some of whom are well known now such as Randy Levine and Bob Kahn, both of whom were in the first group of students that I taught Fortran to in the Control Data office. I talked the University of Colorado Denver Center into going for a National Science Foundation grant. Control Data than provided a 160A, which would run Fortran paper tape, punch a paper tape on flexi raiders and feed it in. So we ran that. My students were the teachers so they taught students and teachers in the evening classes under this NFS grant. I wrote about these kids in Datamation magazine in about 1964 and the article I wrote was called a Modern Day Medicine Show. We picked up the 160A moved it into George Washington High school and for an entire day my students ran demonstrations for different classes that were brought in. Similar to an old fashion medicine show of some guy standing up there trying to sell phony medicine, it struck with me, that this was like this with my students as the barkers. (Students including Levine and Kahn, and Fred Riss whom, I believe, eventually became a vice-president of Research at IBM.)
Jon: Lets talk about your campaigning for BASIC?
Bob: Well, this was in the day of time-sharing systems, so the only access to BASIC at that time was by a time sharing system. BASIC was created by Kemeny & Kurtz at Dartmouth, as an open lab tool for any student on campus at Dartmouth. Kemeny is a famous mathematician and I believe he was the President of Dartmouth at the time, so they created this language called BASIC. They wanted to enable students in fields other than science and mathematics to use computers. At the time, nearly all use of computers required writing custom software, which was something only scientists and mathematicians tended to learn. I said that’s it! No more Fortran, so I started traveling all over the country crusading for BASIC.
In Minneapolis I worked for a while towards a PhD in behavioral psychology, and I just wasn’t PHD type I think. But during that time I taught the teachers at the University of Minnesota High school which was on campus at UOM. At this time BASIC had come along and I was sort of touring the country with the National Counsel of Teachers of Mathematics Group called the Computer Oriented Mathematics Committee; the Committee had six members. So we would meet every so often at educational conferences and we wrote a couple of booklets published by NCTM. We decided to write an introductory booklet, a little thin booklet about computer languages suitable for the teaching of mathematics.
Some people in the NCTM lobbied the booklet to incorporate Fortran, and I lobbied, ranted and raved for BASIC. By that time I had made big buttons that said SHAFT (Society to Help Abolish Fortran Teaching), also I made SHAFT business cards, so I was crusading all over the country for BASIC. We voted and it was 5 and 1 in favor of BASIC. We wrote a little booklet, we wrote most of that booklet in a conference in Miami -- wrote a booklet called Introduction to an Algorithmic Language -- BASIC, so that was my first BASIC effort.
One day a member of Addison Wesley Publishing Company tapped me at one of the conferences and gave me a contract to write a book for teachers and high school students on BASIC. So I worked for a while on that book. Although I grew up in Iowa, went to Iowa State for a couple years than UOM -- as you may know, Minnesota is kind of cold. My publisher was in Palo Alto [California]. And than one December, 23 days of below zero weather, I said to myself: "Why am I writing this book here in Minneapolis for a publisher in Palo Alto? Why don’t I move to California?" So I did. I moved to California, to San Francisco, and continued to write the book. Took me about three years to write a book I could write in six months now. That was my first big book, it was called Computer Methods in Mathematics. It was mostly about BASIC but they required me to throw a little Fortran in at the end of the book.
Jon: What discoveries and adventures came next?
Bob: Well I piled everything I owned at the time -- I was single now -- in my Volkswagen bus and drove to San Francisco. Lived in San Francisco for a while, wrote the book (Computer Methods in Mathematics) with lots of programs and some pretty complex programs and I mostly did not have access to BASIC -- to a time sharing terminal. So I sat down and hand executed them, and fortunately almost every program worked later on when they were checked. I lived on Lombard, the most crooked street in the world, in the house on the east side at the top of a street. It was several stories and I was in a two story flat with a friend of mine. Every Thursday evening I would run computer programming, wine tasting, and Greek dancing parties. A guy named Dick Raymond came to one of these. Dick told us how he had an idle, non-profit corporation that isn’t doing anything right now, and this looks like something that might be fun to do. So I moved to Menlo Park.
Portola is a very important part of this story. Dick and I started cranking up Portola Institute, now I was still going around to a lot of educational conferences, especially California math counsel teacher conferences, at the time. I was being quite successful in talking some of the early makers of programmable calculators into loaning me equipment. So I would load up my Volkswagen bus with equipment I borrowed from various places -- now I was also able to borrow equipment from DEC [Digital Equipment Corportation] as well as Hewlett-Packard. I would borrow mini computers and I could carry one, but it was fairly large. I would load up my VW bus with equipment and go to University of California campuses and teach a weekend course on BASIC, and Bob Kahn went with me a couple of times.
Leroy Finkle was one of the most influential people in the early days of computers in education. At Portola our little group was called DYMAX, which came from dymaxian world of Buckminster Fuller. This was in the hay day of the counter culture movement. All kinds of interesting things were going on in Menlo Park, including the Mid-peninsula Free University 2848. There were a thousand or eleven hundred people either giving or taking free classes through the MFU. This is when Doug Englebart was doing his magic at SRI, so we quickly accumulated a few somewhere between bright and brilliant high school students that started coming in to use all of this equipment that I got on loan. They were amongst the early hackers -- hackers in a good sense. We than caught a contract from Hewlett-Packard which had come out with its first programmable calculator. I think it was called the 9600 and it was about the size of a typewriter and programmed in Reverse Polish notation and it was the forerunner of, eventually, the hand held HP calculators. At the same time there were several other programmable calculators that were coming available. One interesting programmable calculators was the Wang, which had a box about, oh, so big (6 in. by 12 in.), four hardwired calculator terminals, so it was programmable. Of course they had all the scientific operations that you might see on todays calculators. So this money provided enough income for Portola to began to expand a little bit.
Jon: What were some things that came out of Portola?
Bob: One of the things that happened was -- is -- Stewart Brand came to Portola and set up his group which eventually produced the Whole Earth Catalog. So Portola is best known for Stewart’s work. My little group eventually split off, we went and found a cheap warehouse in Redwood City and set up there. We had a couple of PDP-8 computers on loan. The PDP-8 ran four terminals with BASIC using high-speed paper tape input, 10 characters a second and high-speed printer output -- Teletype model 33. So various people came drifting in to use this equipment: Mark LaBrun, Tovar, Jane Woods, and others. That's when I wrote My Computer Likes Me. I wrote it. But people like Gerald Brown and Mary Jo did such a beautiful job of pasting it up, laying it out, that they contributed tons to this, tons -- that is t-o-n-n-e metric, I’m sort of a metric evangelist. Than, one day, wandered in to our place in Redwood City, DYMAX, was Judie Wilson from John Wiley & Son’s. She asked us if we would like to write a self-teaching guide. Now Wiley was just beginning to start these self-teaching guides that were initially linear skinner programs. Linear skinner programing is a system of self teaching developed by B.F. Skinner, the behavioral psychologist. Other people began behavioral psychology but B.F. Skinner was the great popularize. A linear skinner program is a book consisting of frames. A frame might be informative and than immediately followed by a question or an exercise or something for you to do to write in the book, which is than immediately followed by the answer. So you go down, frame by frame by frame, with constant reinforcement. Then, at the end of the chapter, there is a self-test with answers. So we started writing self-teaching guides for Wiley and that continued for a long time, for years. So Leroy Finkle and several other people eventually fit in to DYMAX as co-authors of books of this type.
Around 1970, we moved to Menlo Park on Doyle St. Me and Dennis Allison started doing things initially as DYMAX, there on Doyle St., and I got a great urge, inspired by the Whole Earth Catalogue, to do a periodical. In 1972 Leroy said we could do it if we can do it cheap. So that is why we did the tabloid newspaper -- the cheapest way to publish a lot of stuff. So I decided to call it "People’s Computer Company" in the same spirit as "Big Brother and the Holding Company". See Big Brother and the Holding Company was not actually a holding company. People’s Computer Company was not a company at the time.
Jon:Tell me more about People’s Computer Company, what were the main objectives?
Bob: We didn’t really think about objectives, we just did things as they occurred to us.
October 1972, first issue of PCC: by that time we were doing all kinds of fun things -- like Wednesday night potlucks where we would make our computers available to anyone who came, and I tried to teach Greek dancing and stuff like that. So that was the first issue of PCC which became a six times a year periodical. It's frequently referred to as a quarterly in some of the current online stuff, but it was six times a year. First issue October 1972 was, what, about 16 pages, tabloid. Mark Labrun drew the cover and I put the stuff at the top about computers being used against people. So that was the beginning of PCC, the newspaper, the periodical. Than Dennis and I, Leroy, and some others decided to start a non-profit corporation called People’s Computer Company. Now we had PCC the periodical and PCC the non-profit educational corporation. So this was in the early 1970’s and during this time and a few years there after, Leroy and I, Bob Kahn and others continued to load up all of the computers and go to educational conferences where they would give us a space. The California math counsel conference was held at a Asilomar every year and Asilomar has all of these wonderful little buildings. They put us in a little octagonal building and we just ran open workshops all day. If the conference doors were open we were open. We would -- when we would be doing a presentation [this] allowed us to talk about this or that. And, of course, what we were showing was BASIC and programmable calculators like the Hewlett-Packard and the Wang [calculators] or whatever else we could borrow and take to this thing. We started writing lots of material so that people could teach themselves how to use all of this equipment and of course most of our work was done on the context of the teaching of mathematics.
Jon: What came next?
Bob: Now it was about 1972 or 1973 and I stayed on as editor of PCC,, the periodical for the first five years. I than created Dragonsmoke -- it was my page or sometimes two pages in PCC. Basically this page was whatever I felt like putting in, so that’s why I called it Dragonsmoke. This was an 8 1/2 by 11 thin periodical consisting of a mish mash of computer and computing related information.
During that time I began the move to create the Community Computer Center. We rented the space next door. My group eventually moved downtown in Menlo Park. PCC, the periodical, was produced by PCC, the non-profit corporation, and Community Computer Center set up its very own non-profit corporation that remained on Doyle St. Of course during all of this time we were writing books. From 1969 when Computer Methods of Mathematics was first published until 1996, I was author or co-author of about 33 books. Most of the books about some form of BASIC, up to and including visual BASIC, but also other things like Ramon Zamora and I wrote a shareware book. The shareware book was 768 pages, a big thick book on shareware word processor and spreadsheet and, I think, a drawing program. Ramon and I wrote a book, a little tiny book, on Excel. So we kept on writing books and brought in other authors. I think something like 10 or 11 people wrote their first book as my co-author and than they would branch out and write their own books. Jerry Brown wrote a beautiful book. Jerry started as a co-author on our first Wiley book called BASIC a Self Teaching Guide. Than he wrote a beautiful book later on his own called Instant BASIC. Jerry was a graphic artist and video artist; he had a huge collection of talents and skills. I have no idea of how many of his copies sold but I hope a lot of Instant Basic. He would do the whole thing -- he wrote it, did all the graphics laid it out pasted it up and everything and sent it off to a publisher and it got published
Jon: What was it that made you see the potential in the concept of education through computing?
Bob: What got me into that was when I taught Fortran to those high school kids. I said, "Wow this is so much more fun than anything I have ever done." So because of that -- and word started getting out -- I was than invited to lots of teachers conferences, mostly math teachers. There were also a few beginning conferences about data processing and computing which eventually led to the huge conferences that exist today, but these were smaller conferences. So I was still with Control Data at the time and Control Data acquired Bendix Computer Division. Bendix had a computer called the G-15. The G-15 is about the size of a coke machine with a type writer input and output paper tape -- input and output. Later on they had some [magnetic] tape drives for the G-15. Well, Control Data wanted to sell these G-15’s to schools, very cheap at the time, although it was kind of a trap because you needed access in the same town to an engineer in case it broke down. So I got involved with G-15’s. I would travel around to an educational conference, computer conference. I would go in two days early and Control Data would ship a G-15 in and I would teach 10 or 12 kids and help these kids teach themselves on the G-15, the language called Telecom. So I traveled around the country with a G-15 and than these kids would put on a show. They got out of school for this. They loved it and every kid would produce an interesting program, typically related to mathematics. They would than demonstrate that program to everybody who wanted to see it at the Conference. Later on, at the Association for Computing Machinery meeting in Denver, my high school students Bob Kahn and Randy Levine, those guys were set up by Control Data on the exhibit floor and they spent the entire conference demonstrating what they had learned about Fortran. ACM at that time did not like this. They castigated me. They dissed me for having the audacity to teach computer programming to high school students. At the time they thought they should teach computer programming only. Also, they felt it should be taught only at the college level. A couple of guys would get on my case because I was using BASIC instead of something like APL (a computer language that uses Reverse Polish notation).
Jon: How did Fortran Man come about?
Bob: Fortran Man was done by two guys, they were classic nerds or geeks if you will, they were so clever it was terrific. One lived in Chicago and one lived Milwaukee. On one of my trips I made it a point to visit them and talk to them. They were just classic nerds and I wonder where they are today or if they are even still alive. As Fortran man grew it became graphically better. I think Ann, Mia, or somebody on the PCC staff started re-doing their work and it really looked beautiful. Not only Fortran Man but Billy Basic too. Billy Basic came in later and it was sort of like the dynamic duo so it was Fortran Man and Billy Basic. The best thing to do about Fortran Man is just for you to sit down and read all of the episodes of Fortran Man. It is beyond me to describe, it was so much fun.
Jon: What was your favorite experience in People’s Computer Company?
Bob: We became a focus for a lot of activity during these early days of computers in education. Then, of course, I loved traveling all over California and teaching weekend courses. We typically get around 30 teachers to attend the courses. These courses were called "Computers in the Class Room 1 and 2". Two different courses two credits from the University of California extension. Teachers could use these credits to lobby for pay raises, and the other courses were called "Games Computers Play 1 and 2". Whenever we went to teach somewhere we ran all four concurrently, so if you have taken Computers in the Classroom 1, you can sign up for 2. If you have taken Games Computers Play 1, then you can sign up for Games Computers Play 2. There was virtually no structure, the instructors, usually two of us, would wander around and help people play games or if they wanted to learn to program we would give them teach yourself set up materials so they can start teaching themselves how to program. Sometimes we would wander around and say: "For all of you people who crave structure we will be in the lunchroom at 1:00 for an hour to have a seminar if you want to come." And a few people would come and some wouldn’t. Some would just continue working away. We also asked these teachers to grade themselves because I was not a classroom teacher in a normal sense. A lot of teachers intensely resisted grading themselves and practically begged us to give them a grade. So I have no idea of how many of these we did, but it was a lot of them. We taught a few at Lawrence Hall of Science [UC Berkeley], UC San Diego, UC Riverside, UC Santa Barbra, UC Davis, and we even ran one course at the airport in San Mateo. We traveled to almost all of the campuses of the University of California extension and ran these courses.
Well, all of this happened because I began teaching kids how to program, and I liked doing that so much that it sort of just took over my life. Almost everything that was going on was related in some way to helping kids teach themselves. I don’t like to say that we are teaching, I like to set up environments in which people can teach themselves with a little help. That is why I write 'teach yourself' instruction materials. I wrote teach yourself books so that people who did not have access to a computer teacher could use these books as an alternative, so all they need is access to a computer that ran BASIC and they could teach themselves how to program. It was really fun. I loved Wednesday evenings because all of these interesting people would come in and they would play computer games, especially when the computer center was set up next door, so we had these two places, we had so many things going on at the same time.
Interview with Liza Loop: Q and A
Jon: What do you think sparked your interest in computers?
Liza: For starters computers aren’t the focus of my interest people are. Computers are a technology that people have to adjust to. It was clear to e that it was a really powerful technology and it was going to change the way we did things so I was excited to be in at the beginning at the popularization of computers so I could see how people changed. That’s what was going on in the early 70s when I started working on this, but I would have to admit that my family was into computers a lot earlier than that. I grew up in a science and technology household. My father was an audiophile and had done some research on coding, worked with scientists at MI. It was both questions of language and questions of coding and questions of the use of technology for all kinds of things were dinner table conversation for us so this isn’t a big leap for me
Technology doesn't mean electronics it means know how. Technique is how you do things and -ology is the study of things. I think your asking when did I see the potential of electronic computers for education not technology, because everything has a technology whether it is a pencil or a digging stick it is all technology. Educational technology when I was in school was books what we call ditto sheets or spirit masters, mimiograph; blackboard there is a wonderful description of a blackboard as a fantastic new educational technology. But kids who were using slates in the 1600's so a big slate in the front of the classroom was a new technology compared with the small slates kids had at their desks even in all through the 1800's. We were using what were called program learning books which were little workbooks small paper bound books 8 1/2 by 11 with questions or exercises on one side and you folded a paper over the answer and than you can slide the paper down to get the answer, so you would look on the left hand side of the page because we are working in English because I’m American and the question or the exercise would be on the left hand side and you had the page closed and you wrote your answer down than you slid the coversheet down so you could see the answer than you could correct your own work. My first introduction to computing in educating was automating that process. When we first started using computers they were large computers being time shared so there were lots of people using the same computer. So it was a no brainer to go from that to communicating between those people there was no Internet but you could send a message to somebody else. So the ideas of creating classroom simulations both synchronous meaning everyone is communicating at the same time or asynchronous meaning one person puts in there ideas comments responses and another person can see those later and interact in a time segmented way asynchronously. Those were radical ideas for ordinary classroom teachers but for those of us who were trying to imagine what the future could be like, they were pretty obvious. That was a formal education aspect of it but the none formal education aspect of it but the non formal education aspect of it was here were these new instruments that we wanted to learn how to use how were we going to learn how to use them because nobody else knows either. So I think even more important than the effort to automate existing teaching techniques was the growth of peer interaction of you go study or experiment how ever you can than you come together in a group and you share what you discovered with everybody else and you hope they discovered something different so each one can teach each other. Both the social technology combination of studying by yourself and coming together in a group and peer teaching and the growth of originally newsletters or how to do it manuals into what is now become the internet and all the how to do it YouTube videos, that was a pretty smooth transition. But we could imagine back before todays technologies were available we could imagine using these instruments to create that world.
Jon: You, Dean Brown, Stuart Cooney, started LO*OP Center, what were the main objectives?
Liza: Well I was here at sonoma state at the time and my fellow students and the professors as well as I had access to the state college computer system where the actual computer system was at Cal State Northridge. WE were sitting in Stevenson hall in a little room with what were called glass teletypes they were terminal with keyboard and screen with keyboard and we were timesharing with the Cal state system computer and there were what we would now call applications in other words if you wanted to crunch some numbers you could get a program to do that and there were games and lessons and programming languages available and there were about 6 or 7 seats in that little timeshare room and everybody is hunched over there keyboard and when somebody had a question if they didn’t know how to do something you turn to the person next to you and ask. But that was a real privilege to be able to use those, there was also by the way outside of the timeshare room 3 or 4 punch machines so you could make your own deck of cards and submit your own deck to be processed for bash processing which was a more at that time in the early 70s the more normal way that people did computing you didn’t do it in real time. Unless you were a student at a university or working for a company that used computers nobody had access to them. Nobody else could get to them they couldn’t learn about them they couldn’t access them they couldn’t use them for their own purposes. I though that these things would infiltrate society as they did and that there were going to be two kinds of people in the world in the future the kind of people who knew about computers and computing and how to control them and the people that were controlled by them and to me that was a real anti-utopias, this was a way of creating a way for ordinary people who were neither university students or people working for companies that had computers could get access to them learn about them use them either for their work or for there play or for there education.
Jon: What are some opportunities LO*OP Center allowed the people?
Liza: We were right on the bus line between Petaluma and Santa Rosa because were in downtown Cotati. There were almost no computers in schools so kids could come after school to loop center and do whatever they wanted with it. We taught programming we taught as applications came up we taught applications. We had the only copy machine publicly accessible copy machine as well. At that time there were no copy centers so if you wanted to make a copy of something I’m trying to think of where one would go aside from the LO*OP Center. Xerox machines and there were only Xerox machines and that was what you could get were just not publicly available, big companies had them otherwise if you wanted a copy of something you retyped it, and when you knew you were going to want copies you used carbon paper when you typed it. That was just a sideline but it actually brought us enough money to keep the doors open. People would come in and pay 15 or 20 cents a page. There was one man who had a stock investment scheme who was working out his process on our computer which was a pvp8, a digital corporation machine so he came and what we did was, computer time was 10$ an hour but for 10$ a month. If you wanted to rent time on one of our computers we had 3 or 4 of them you could rent private time on the computer for 10$ hour but for 10$ a month you become a member of loop center and the members could use the computers anytime there were no private it wasn’t sold for private time. So kids came and played games, schools brought field trips and after the first or second year we started taking the computers over to schools because people became more interested. It was also a place where people could just meet and greet we had a lounge and people could come talk and sit about their interests.
Jon: Can you further explain the story of the loop center being a milestone in the in 1976 in the development of the internet and its significance for education?
That’s what happens when people who were not there try and rewrite history. When we opened and we were on east Cotati av. in a second floor office when we first opened 1975 in December. You had to get a special phone line to send data over the phone line for starters you couldn’t send it through the air and we used what was called an acoustic kepler and you had your data conditioned line and an old fashioned headset which had two round circles in it one for the earphone one for the microphone one for the speaker and you dialed up the computer line to someplace where there was a computer that had a modem at the other end and when it started buzzing and clicking than you took your handset and you pushed it in to two rubber cups modem which stands for modulator demodulator and took those audio clicks and buzzes and turned them into electronic signals which was the modulation sends it down the phone line as audio signal and at the other and the other modem demodulated sent it as an electronic signal into the computer. We had and of course if there was any noise or static on the line you get an error in the computer signal they would have to resend it. We had an account with an organization with call computer in Mountain View California, which just sold time on their hp computer, and then we had an account with Lawrence hall of science. That is how we opened we did not have our own computer when we first opened. There was no Internet there was the phone company all one-phone company, which was AT&T there were no alternate competing phone companies at the time. We had a teletype which is what they use to send telegrams through which was all uppercase and the modems in the phone line and the phoneline went directly to the computer time that we rented on somebody else’s computer. Just popularizing and letting people know that they can get access to a computer over the phone lines was I think creating the social context for the internet so maybe that’s what the person that wrote that timeline was talking about. Arpanet, which the precursor to the Internet existed at the time but it, was only through universities and government agencies. It was started as a military communication device and there was connection at Mofit field in Mountain View there was a connection at Stanford institute there was no connection up here so if I wanted to get on Arpanet I had to make a long distance phone call there was a connection at UC Berkley it was probably a connection at Stanford each of the connections was called a tip, this was a time when there was a lot of counterculture people out there some of whom were actually in the military and were in big corporations and a friend gave me the access codes for Arpanet to tip and so some of us got on the Arpanet uses it to send precursor email messages to our friends across the country or the world but I think again the person that picked up that we were doing internet kind of stuff was just looking at us using telnet which was intermediate phone company, I’m trying to think of what the relationship is between you had to have both an at&t account and a telnet account and the telnet number called the computer number and both the sending terminal and the receiving computer had to have telnet accounts. In our collection I haven’t been thinking about this recently but I was real good at it at the time and again part of why what I want to do hcle is so people have a concept of how complicating it was to do what we take for granted today and I have lots of manuals showing telling how to use this stuff and what exactly the process is and of course because we had a public access computer center I had to write instructions for how to do this for people came in off the street and wanted to use computers to play computer games.
Jon: How did HCLE come about?
Well actually there were two triggers. One was I had to close the storefront several years earlier. Hcle started in 2003 as a dream not as a reality, and the LO*OP Center has been closed as a loop center storefront computer center for over 10 years b than so the public access dream was not happening at that time but I never threw anything out so I had it in storage and I moved and had to move all that stuff. I said to myself well I got to get rid of most of this and either I can throw it out or I can say somebody might be interested in this stuff and I could make a museum out of it. So I was trying to figure out what to do and one of my board members for loop center Jackie Hood said she would really like to the museum project and so she started working on it we ended up deciding to take it different directions ad since I was the founder it got to going my direction but Jackie was instrumental in getting me going
Jon: What are your thoughts on the use of computers as an educational tool and where do you see the future of this technique?
Education comes from the Latin word -educare mean lead out of so education is always a way of leading someone out of the way that they are into some new place. I always contrast education with learning. Learning goes on all the time everything and every situation is an opportunity for learning. If a person has changed they learned something, they may learn to be afraid of thunder or they may learn to calculate differential equations those are both learning experiences so learning to use a new tool is just as much learning as being able to recite the Gettysburg address even though one may be on some formal curriculum and the other one isn't. Learning to use a computer has become a part of formal education another aspect of education is in general we only teach proactively those things that people don't learn spontaneously this is becoming a problem because in a world surrounded by books and writing and computers little kids often learn these things without any formal teaching. There are lots of kids who get curious and teach themselves to read and most of us don’t learn to use a modern computer in school we learn it from our friends on the street at home so there is a tension between the process we see at schooling where somehow the learner is suppose to wait for the teacher to present information to them and then acquire it through that presentation process vs. the absorbing that we do from learning from our environment it is important to think about those issues and the relationship between computing school because the modern computer does two things. First of all it has become ubiquitous so 2 or 3 year olds are learning how to use computers the way they are learning how to use crayons which didn’t necessarily happen in school, in a home which wouldn’t necessarily be considered a culturally deprived home every kid learns how to use a computer and probably learn how to hold a pencil and in the same way today an awful amount of kids are learning how to use computers without needing to be taught. The fact that it is part of the environment and you learn to use it from your older brothers and sisters means it is not a school subject. Once you know how to read and use a computer there is a huge world of information that is open to you which didn’t use to be open to people, we use to be pretty much limited to the knowledge that was available in our family in our neighborhood through our teachers through our school and once you have a computer and its related connections to the rest of the world it is a window on a world that is much bigger than a funnel that any teacher could feed you of information. I had that particular concept in the early 70's and was really excited about empowering people to be self directed learners in a sense that’s a very disruptive function for the machine it disrupts the function of the school and I am a rebel and didn’t much like school was always bored and saw it as a way for everybody to break out of the classroom to break out of the lockstep of school to be able to access the information you are interested in follow your dreams learn what you wanted to learn and in a sense when you have that kind of access to the world of knowledge a teacher becomes an accessory to your world of learning and the learner becomes the center of the activity and the teacher becomes one f many different tools that you use to learn it is a completely different way of thinking about growing up and continuing to grow, growing out once you grown up you still keep growing out. It’s a different way of thinking about that process than the teachers centered classroom. Is aw the computer as a Trojan horse that would break down the walls of the school and was very excited about that possibility I’m also really unhappy when I see schools try and lock down the computer close it up I think that is a defensive move to try and preserve the status quo of the teachers centered classroom I think it is doomed to failure and the sooner we reinvent the way we scuffled learning the better, and the computer is actually being the Trojan horse that I thought it would.
With all of your history with computers and your involvement with both the Loop center and HCLE.
Jon: What is some key knowledge you attained and lessons or facts about computers you feel everyone should know or be aware of?
I think the key facts in learning are not about technology they are about people. I think since we are humans we live in our own psychology and our own bodies and knowing ourselves and what keeps us happy and active and interested is the most important thing we could know and I know that I can not sit in front of a computer forever and I think that is a really important thing for each person to experience because the computer is a window on the world it is very addicted to sitting looking out that window. We have to understand the danger of that addiction and learn to cope with it. And not lose sight of all of the other joys that are available to being human. So that is number one, number two is the computer with its associated telecomunications breaks down both time and space between us as individuals and it gives us a lot of opportunities for social relationships that we have never had before. This society whether we are talking about American or western or global we don’t yet know how to use this new found ability talent opportunity and I think we are going to have to do a lot of, I like the term social engineering I know a lot of people think the term is pejorative but I see it as building and inventing new ways of relating that enhance the common good. The anti-utopia is that those folks who know about computers use them to control everybody else, and that is why I started Loop Center I didn’t want that scenario to become reality. In a way it is becoming a reality an awful amount of modern jobs basically use the person the worker as a peripheral to a computer so when I call a helpdesk or customer service, I’m really not interested in having the person I take to read to me what is on the screen what I could read for myself. To me that is an example of being a peripheral to a computer if I’m going to talk to a human I want it to be a thinking feeling person I don’t want the customer service person to give me an apology which is written on his or her screen or to tell me thank you for my patience when I have given every indication that I was not patient at all. So that is another opportunity for reinventing our society is to make sure we stay honest and to make sure we do not let ourselves become what we perceive as slaves to the machine but it is really not slaves to the machine it is slaves to the person behind the machine. There is never a case when the computer will not let you do something, because the computer never gives permission. The computer just does what the computer is programmed to do. If somebody tell me I cant do it the computer will not let me is a small matter of programming I have to get through the shield that people have used the computer to protect themselves with and get to the person who is doing the instruction of the programmer telling them what to tell the computer telling them what to tell the customer the consumer the user the poor bloke who wants to get something done. That is another reason why I wanted to do loop center is so that we as individuals would not be inoculated against this tyranny of the machine which again is the tyranny of the people behind the machine that we just wouldn’t fall for that. I dont think I have succeeded in that. The story needs to be told and the story needs to be told over and over again and it is a rallying cry.
Jon: What is the ideal future of HCLE?
There are three ideal futures. My intent is for it to be an ongoing institution, one ideal future is that it survives in some form I really want the story of how computing got from being completely irrelevant to education to considered a foundation stone of teaching and learning and that story is getting lost. People do not know anymore what we went through to get there and what we thought about to create the future that we are living in now. Having hcle exist in a sustainable form and keep using its initial of the history of computing and learning in education virtual museum, just having it exist is just one ideal. That it is a force for people not being able to be terrorized by the machine oppressed by the shield that the machine is used for is another ideal for me that the people were visionary and worked very hard about bring the personal computing revolution get credit for the work they did and the foresight they had that’s another ideal those people are dying and being forgotten. If I’m forgotten that is not so important but if all of us are forgotten that is a bad thing I think. It is a story of innovation it is a story of change and is a story of a great deal of creativity so I think it would be fun to have it told.
Jon: What is the best way for an individual to handle technology that they might feel is out of there control?
That is a wonderful question. There are a lot of different ways of control. Different kinds of control. When I was teaching at Loop Center, as it was on the open for 3 years as a public access computer center, the kids were often excited about robots and the best way to control a robot the sure fire way to control a robot it to remove its power supply. So if it doesn’t have some source of electricity it is dead, so whether that mean unplugging it or taking its batteries out or turning it off that is number one of electronic technology. Another aspect of control of at least computer and internet technology is privacy concerns, and maintaining and protecting ones identity on the web what ever one wants to keep out of public knowledge and I think the best way to do that is don’t put it on the internet, if it is on the airwaves on the net in a computer that is connected to anything else you might as well kiss it goodbye it is public. Sooner or later our whole banking system is going to get hacked and we are in for an amazing surprise. That’s my personal belief. If what you’re trying to control your privacy than don’t put it on a computer. Another way to control secrets is not to have any, you either don’t put it on the computer or you don’t care if the public knows the world knows. I like the no secrets approach myself, but in those few cases where I don’t want the public to know I just do not put it on the computer. Other forms of dealing with technology are learned about it; again technology is not computers are not electronics that is electronic technology. Technology is know how and in a sense without know how there is no technology, but you don’t want the other guy to be the only one who has got the know how. If you want control you have to have it to. Learning the basic principal of garbage in garbage out is incredibly important. There was a management textbook, I took a management course here at Sonoma State it cited a study of whether people believed something that was handwritten typed written or something that was on a computer print out, and those were the days you could tell the difference between a computer print out and a typed written page and at the time the study was done in 1965 people believed the computer printout first, the type written second, and the hand written third. That’s backwards. Anyone can make a computer print out anything they want, the fact that it is on a computer is totally irrelevant. That is what the garbage in garbage out principle means. Your more likely to get something honest if somebody write you a hand written note than you are if you are to find it on the Wikipedia. So that is another way of taking control is learning what messages to trust and what messages are suspect and how to verify how do you triangulate how do you figure out whether something that somebody is telling you, I wont say is real because I don’t know what reality is, but has a high probability of being reliable in this small piece of the universe that we live in.
Interview with Bob Albrecht: Q and A
Jon: What do you think sparked your interest in computers?
Bob: My interest in computers? Well, lets see it began in 1955. After going to college for quite a few years I finally quit half way through a masters degree and went to work at Minneapolis Honeywell Aeronautical Division in Minneapolis. This was one of those places where almost as far as you can see in this huge room were rows and columns of desks and engineers; sitting at them doing things. At first I worked on analogue computers there- REAC analogue computers. It was a room about lets you see two-thirds the size of this room (20 yards by 20 yards) full of these components and analogue computers you would use wires to hook components together and than you can simulate differential equations. We were working on flight control systems for high-speed jet aircrafts. There were other ways at that time to analyze control systems, several mechanisms feedback control systems. Than upstairs they got an IBM650 computer, the upstairs where I hung out and worked at my desk. One day my boss called me in, I have only been there for three or four months, and he said that he would like me to go upstairs and learn how to use that computer. Once I learned how to use it he than wanted me to spread the word down where we were. So that was my introduction to computers, an IBM650 drum computer. The memory was a drum that would spin, we used punch cards for input and such. So that was my introduction to computing.
Jon: How did this introduction affect you?
Bob: I liked that so much better than the stuff I was doing before, and after about a year I started looking around for a job in the computer industry. And, at the time, I especially wanted to go live in Denver because I loved skiing. I got married during this time and also had a child.
I went to a conference, a computer conference at UCLA and than on the way back there was another computer conference in Denver. So I stopped in Denver and I met these guys from a company -from Burroughs Corporation. Boroughs had just acquired a computer company called Electrodata which was based in Pasadena CA. The Oakland office was recruiting, I interviewed and I ended up being Burroughs first person in Denver. They had a couple computer installations there; my title was called sales technical rep where I did sales support and also programming. So I stayed in Denver for a while, left Burroughs, did a little consulting, went to work in the Aerospace Industry at Martin Denver in a math think tank that had various kinds of computers various kinds and computer stuff along the way -- many different computers in fact. At that time the small computers were all drum memory, this is so much more powerful (picks up iPhone) than those computers were back in those days. The Burroughs205, used when I first went to work for Burroughs, is iconic. In old episodes of Batman you will see the consul because they had lots of blinking lights and so it was the Bat-puter in those early Batman episodes. After that I joined Control Data in Denver -- back when Control Data was pretty small. I than transferred to Minneapolis and worked at Control Data in Minneapolis for a while. Around the early 1960’s or so I quit, dropped out and began doing a little consulting -- and by that time I was traveling all over the country to teachers' conferences giving papers and running workshops. When BASIC came along in 1964, by that time I was already running a course for high school students. So I started teaching high school students Fortran Programming in 1962.
Jon: Can you further elaborate on your experience of teaching and computing in the early 1960’s?
Bob: So in 1962 I began to teach high school students. Some of whom are well known now such as Randy Levine and Bob Kahn, both of whom were in the first group of students that I taught Fortran to in the Control Data office. I talked the University of Colorado Denver Center into going for a National Science Foundation grant. Control Data than provided a 160A, which would run Fortran paper tape, punch a paper tape on flexi raiders and feed it in. So we ran that. My students were the teachers so they taught students and teachers in the evening classes under this NFS grant. I wrote about these kids in Datamation magazine in about 1964 and the article I wrote was called a Modern Day Medicine Show. We picked up the 160A moved it into George Washington High school and for an entire day my students ran demonstrations for different classes that were brought in. Similar to an old fashion medicine show of some guy standing up there trying to sell phony medicine, it struck with me, that this was like this with my students as the barkers. (Students including Levine and Kahn, and Fred Riss whom, I believe, eventually became a vice-president of Research at IBM.)
Jon: Lets talk about your campaigning for BASIC?
Bob: Well, this was in the day of time-sharing systems, so the only access to BASIC at that time was by a time sharing system. BASIC was created by Kemeny & Kurtz at Dartmouth, as an open lab tool for any student on campus at Dartmouth. Kemeny is a famous mathematician and I believe he was the President of Dartmouth at the time, so they created this language called BASIC. They wanted to enable students in fields other than science and mathematics to use computers. At the time, nearly all use of computers required writing custom software, which was something only scientists and mathematicians tended to learn. I said that’s it! No more Fortran, so I started traveling all over the country crusading for BASIC.
In Minneapolis I worked for a while towards a PhD in behavioral psychology, and I just wasn’t PHD type I think. But during that time I taught the teachers at the University of Minnesota High school which was on campus at UOM. At this time BASIC had come along and I was sort of touring the country with the National Counsel of Teachers of Mathematics Group called the Computer Oriented Mathematics Committee; the Committee had six members. So we would meet every so often at educational conferences and we wrote a couple of booklets published by NCTM. We decided to write an introductory booklet, a little thin booklet about computer languages suitable for the teaching of mathematics.
Some people in the NCTM lobbied the booklet to incorporate Fortran, and I lobbied, ranted and raved for BASIC. By that time I had made big buttons that said SHAFT (Society to Help Abolish Fortran Teaching), also I made SHAFT business cards, so I was crusading all over the country for BASIC. We voted and it was 5 and 1 in favor of BASIC. We wrote a little booklet, we wrote most of that booklet in a conference in Miami -- wrote a booklet called Introduction to an Algorithmic Language -- BASIC, so that was my first BASIC effort.
One day a member of Addison Wesley Publishing Company tapped me at one of the conferences and gave me a contract to write a book for teachers and high school students on BASIC. So I worked for a while on that book. Although I grew up in Iowa, went to Iowa State for a couple years than UOM -- as you may know, Minnesota is kind of cold. My publisher was in Palo Alto [California]. And than one December, 23 days of below zero weather, I said to myself: "Why am I writing this book here in Minneapolis for a publisher in Palo Alto? Why don’t I move to California?" So I did. I moved to California, to San Francisco, and continued to write the book. Took me about three years to write a book I could write in six months now. That was my first big book, it was called Computer Methods in Mathematics. It was mostly about BASIC but they required me to throw a little Fortran in at the end of the book.
Jon: What discoveries and adventures came next?
Bob: Well I piled everything I owned at the time -- I was single now -- in my Volkswagen bus and drove to San Francisco. Lived in San Francisco for a while, wrote the book (Computer Methods in Mathematics) with lots of programs and some pretty complex programs and I mostly did not have access to BASIC -- to a time sharing terminal. So I sat down and hand executed them, and fortunately almost every program worked later on when they were checked. I lived on Lombard, the most crooked street in the world, in the house on the east side at the top of a street. It was several stories and I was in a two story flat with a friend of mine. Every Thursday evening I would run computer programming, wine tasting, and Greek dancing parties. A guy named Dick Raymond came to one of these. Dick told us how he had an idle, non-profit corporation that isn’t doing anything right now, and this looks like something that might be fun to do. So I moved to Menlo Park.
Portola is a very important part of this story. Dick and I started cranking up Portola Institute, now I was still going around to a lot of educational conferences, especially California math counsel teacher conferences, at the time. I was being quite successful in talking some of the early makers of programmable calculators into loaning me equipment. So I would load up my Volkswagen bus with equipment I borrowed from various places -- now I was also able to borrow equipment from DEC [Digital Equipment Corportation] as well as Hewlett-Packard. I would borrow mini computers and I could carry one, but it was fairly large. I would load up my VW bus with equipment and go to University of California campuses and teach a weekend course on BASIC, and Bob Kahn went with me a couple of times.
Leroy Finkle was one of the most influential people in the early days of computers in education. At Portola our little group was called DYMAX, which came from dymaxian world of Buckminster Fuller. This was in the hay day of the counter culture movement. All kinds of interesting things were going on in Menlo Park, including the Mid-peninsula Free University 2848. There were a thousand or eleven hundred people either giving or taking free classes through the MFU. This is when Doug Englebart was doing his magic at SRI, so we quickly accumulated a few somewhere between bright and brilliant high school students that started coming in to use all of this equipment that I got on loan. They were amongst the early hackers -- hackers in a good sense. We than caught a contract from Hewlett-Packard which had come out with its first programmable calculator. I think it was called the 9600 and it was about the size of a typewriter and programmed in Reverse Polish notation and it was the forerunner of, eventually, the hand held HP calculators. At the same time there were several other programmable calculators that were coming available. One interesting programmable calculators was the Wang, which had a box about, oh, so big (6 in. by 12 in.), four hardwired calculator terminals, so it was programmable. Of course they had all the scientific operations that you might see on todays calculators. So this money provided enough income for Portola to began to expand a little bit.
Jon: What were some things that came out of Portola?
Bob: One of the things that happened was -- is -- Stewart Brand came to Portola and set up his group which eventually produced the Whole Earth Catalog. So Portola is best known for Stewart’s work. My little group eventually split off, we went and found a cheap warehouse in Redwood City and set up there. We had a couple of PDP-8 computers on loan. The PDP-8 ran four terminals with BASIC using high-speed paper tape input, 10 characters a second and high-speed printer output -- Teletype model 33. So various people came drifting in to use this equipment: Mark LaBrun, Tovar, Jane Woods, and others. That's when I wrote My Computer Likes Me. I wrote it. But people like Gerald Brown and Mary Jo did such a beautiful job of pasting it up, laying it out, that they contributed tons to this, tons -- that is t-o-n-n-e metric, I’m sort of a metric evangelist. Than, one day, wandered in to our place in Redwood City, DYMAX, was Judie Wilson from John Wiley & Son’s. She asked us if we would like to write a self-teaching guide. Now Wiley was just beginning to start these self-teaching guides that were initially linear skinner programs. Linear skinner programing is a system of self teaching developed by B.F. Skinner, the behavioral psychologist. Other people began behavioral psychology but B.F. Skinner was the great popularize. A linear skinner program is a book consisting of frames. A frame might be informative and than immediately followed by a question or an exercise or something for you to do to write in the book, which is than immediately followed by the answer. So you go down, frame by frame by frame, with constant reinforcement. Then, at the end of the chapter, there is a self-test with answers. So we started writing self-teaching guides for Wiley and that continued for a long time, for years. So Leroy Finkle and several other people eventually fit in to DYMAX as co-authors of books of this type.
Around 1970, we moved to Menlo Park on Doyle St. Me and Dennis Allison started doing things initially as DYMAX, there on Doyle St., and I got a great urge, inspired by the Whole Earth Catalogue, to do a periodical. In 1972 Leroy said we could do it if we can do it cheap. So that is why we did the tabloid newspaper -- the cheapest way to publish a lot of stuff. So I decided to call it "People’s Computer Company" in the same spirit as "Big Brother and the Holding Company". See Big Brother and the Holding Company was not actually a holding company. People’s Computer Company was not a company at the time.
Jon:Tell me more about People’s Computer Company, what were the main objectives?
Bob: We didn’t really think about objectives, we just did things as they occurred to us.
October 1972, first issue of PCC: by that time we were doing all kinds of fun things -- like Wednesday night potlucks where we would make our computers available to anyone who came, and I tried to teach Greek dancing and stuff like that. So that was the first issue of PCC which became a six times a year periodical. It's frequently referred to as a quarterly in some of the current online stuff, but it was six times a year. First issue October 1972 was, what, about 16 pages, tabloid. Mark Labrun drew the cover and I put the stuff at the top about computers being used against people. So that was the beginning of PCC, the newspaper, the periodical. Than Dennis and I, Leroy, and some others decided to start a non-profit corporation called People’s Computer Company. Now we had PCC the periodical and PCC the non-profit educational corporation. So this was in the early 1970’s and during this time and a few years there after, Leroy and I, Bob Kahn and others continued to load up all of the computers and go to educational conferences where they would give us a space. The California math counsel conference was held at a Asilomar every year and Asilomar has all of these wonderful little buildings. They put us in a little octagonal building and we just ran open workshops all day. If the conference doors were open we were open. We would -- when we would be doing a presentation [this] allowed us to talk about this or that. And, of course, what we were showing was BASIC and programmable calculators like the Hewlett-Packard and the Wang [calculators] or whatever else we could borrow and take to this thing. We started writing lots of material so that people could teach themselves how to use all of this equipment and of course most of our work was done on the context of the teaching of mathematics.
Jon: What came next?
Bob: Now it was about 1972 or 1973 and I stayed on as editor of PCC,, the periodical for the first five years. I than created Dragonsmoke -- it was my page or sometimes two pages in PCC. Basically this page was whatever I felt like putting in, so that’s why I called it Dragonsmoke. This was an 8 1/2 by 11 thin periodical consisting of a mish mash of computer and computing related information.
During that time I began the move to create the Community Computer Center. We rented the space next door. My group eventually moved downtown in Menlo Park. PCC, the periodical, was produced by PCC, the non-profit corporation, and Community Computer Center set up its very own non-profit corporation that remained on Doyle St. Of course during all of this time we were writing books. From 1969 when Computer Methods of Mathematics was first published until 1996, I was author or co-author of about 33 books. Most of the books about some form of BASIC, up to and including visual BASIC, but also other things like Ramon Zamora and I wrote a shareware book. The shareware book was 768 pages, a big thick book on shareware word processor and spreadsheet and, I think, a drawing program. Ramon and I wrote a book, a little tiny book, on Excel. So we kept on writing books and brought in other authors. I think something like 10 or 11 people wrote their first book as my co-author and than they would branch out and write their own books. Jerry Brown wrote a beautiful book. Jerry started as a co-author on our first Wiley book called BASIC a Self Teaching Guide. Than he wrote a beautiful book later on his own called Instant BASIC. Jerry was a graphic artist and video artist; he had a huge collection of talents and skills. I have no idea of how many of his copies sold but I hope a lot of Instant Basic. He would do the whole thing -- he wrote it, did all the graphics laid it out pasted it up and everything and sent it off to a publisher and it got published
Jon: What was it that made you see the potential in the concept of education through computing?
Bob: What got me into that was when I taught Fortran to those high school kids. I said, "Wow this is so much more fun than anything I have ever done." So because of that -- and word started getting out -- I was than invited to lots of teachers conferences, mostly math teachers. There were also a few beginning conferences about data processing and computing which eventually led to the huge conferences that exist today, but these were smaller conferences. So I was still with Control Data at the time and Control Data acquired Bendix Computer Division. Bendix had a computer called the G-15. The G-15 is about the size of a coke machine with a type writer input and output paper tape -- input and output. Later on they had some [magnetic] tape drives for the G-15. Well, Control Data wanted to sell these G-15’s to schools, very cheap at the time, although it was kind of a trap because you needed access in the same town to an engineer in case it broke down. So I got involved with G-15’s. I would travel around to an educational conference, computer conference. I would go in two days early and Control Data would ship a G-15 in and I would teach 10 or 12 kids and help these kids teach themselves on the G-15, the language called Telecom. So I traveled around the country with a G-15 and than these kids would put on a show. They got out of school for this. They loved it and every kid would produce an interesting program, typically related to mathematics. They would than demonstrate that program to everybody who wanted to see it at the Conference. Later on, at the Association for Computing Machinery meeting in Denver, my high school students Bob Kahn and Randy Levine, those guys were set up by Control Data on the exhibit floor and they spent the entire conference demonstrating what they had learned about Fortran. ACM at that time did not like this. They castigated me. They dissed me for having the audacity to teach computer programming to high school students. At the time they thought they should teach computer programming only. Also, they felt it should be taught only at the college level. A couple of guys would get on my case because I was using BASIC instead of something like APL (a computer language that uses Reverse Polish notation).
Jon: How did Fortran Man come about?
Bob: Fortran Man was done by two guys, they were classic nerds or geeks if you will, they were so clever it was terrific. One lived in Chicago and one lived Milwaukee. On one of my trips I made it a point to visit them and talk to them. They were just classic nerds and I wonder where they are today or if they are even still alive. As Fortran man grew it became graphically better. I think Ann, Mia, or somebody on the PCC staff started re-doing their work and it really looked beautiful. Not only Fortran Man but Billy Basic too. Billy Basic came in later and it was sort of like the dynamic duo so it was Fortran Man and Billy Basic. The best thing to do about Fortran Man is just for you to sit down and read all of the episodes of Fortran Man. It is beyond me to describe, it was so much fun.
Jon: What was your favorite experience in People’s Computer Company?
Bob: We became a focus for a lot of activity during these early days of computers in education. Then, of course, I loved traveling all over California and teaching weekend courses. We typically get around 30 teachers to attend the courses. These courses were called "Computers in the Class Room 1 and 2". Two different courses two credits from the University of California extension. Teachers could use these credits to lobby for pay raises, and the other courses were called "Games Computers Play 1 and 2". Whenever we went to teach somewhere we ran all four concurrently, so if you have taken Computers in the Classroom 1, you can sign up for 2. If you have taken Games Computers Play 1, then you can sign up for Games Computers Play 2. There was virtually no structure, the instructors, usually two of us, would wander around and help people play games or if they wanted to learn to program we would give them teach yourself set up materials so they can start teaching themselves how to program. Sometimes we would wander around and say: "For all of you people who crave structure we will be in the lunchroom at 1:00 for an hour to have a seminar if you want to come." And a few people would come and some wouldn’t. Some would just continue working away. We also asked these teachers to grade themselves because I was not a classroom teacher in a normal sense. A lot of teachers intensely resisted grading themselves and practically begged us to give them a grade. So I have no idea of how many of these we did, but it was a lot of them. We taught a few at Lawrence Hall of Science [UC Berkeley], UC San Diego, UC Riverside, UC Santa Barbra, UC Davis, and we even ran one course at the airport in San Mateo. We traveled to almost all of the campuses of the University of California extension and ran these courses.
Well, all of this happened because I began teaching kids how to program, and I liked doing that so much that it sort of just took over my life. Almost everything that was going on was related in some way to helping kids teach themselves. I don’t like to say that we are teaching, I like to set up environments in which people can teach themselves with a little help. That is why I write 'teach yourself' instruction materials. I wrote teach yourself books so that people who did not have access to a computer teacher could use these books as an alternative, so all they need is access to a computer that ran BASIC and they could teach themselves how to program. It was really fun. I loved Wednesday evenings because all of these interesting people would come in and they would play computer games, especially when the computer center was set up next door, so we had these two places, we had so many things going on at the same time.